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Family dynamics can be battlegrounds. For Dee Williams, a 34-year-old graphic designer from Atlanta, the phrase "payback for stepmom" wasn't just a fleeting thought—it was a mantra she had whispered to herself for nearly a decade. But as she would soon learn, the concept of "Herlimit"—the invisible boundary between justified retaliation and self-destruction—would become the most important lesson of her life.
Today, Dee has not spoken to Trish in four years—by mutual choice. She has a small garden, a cat named Charles, and a rule for herself: Before any act of retaliation, she waits 72 hours. “If I still want to do it after three days,” she says, “I write it in a letter. Then I burn the letter.”
Family dynamics can be battlegrounds. For Dee Williams, a 34-year-old graphic designer from Atlanta, the phrase "payback for stepmom" wasn't just a fleeting thought—it was a mantra she had whispered to herself for nearly a decade. But as she would soon learn, the concept of "Herlimit"—the invisible boundary between justified retaliation and self-destruction—would become the most important lesson of her life.
Today, Dee has not spoken to Trish in four years—by mutual choice. She has a small garden, a cat named Charles, and a rule for herself: Before any act of retaliation, she waits 72 hours. “If I still want to do it after three days,” she says, “I write it in a letter. Then I burn the letter.”